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Is the Ukraine war about to spread to Moldova?

Vladimir Putin attends a patriotic concert in Moscow yesterday. Credit: Getty.

February 24, 2023 - 9:30am

Given the sheer scale of the carnage, it seems wrong to describe the war in Ukraine as ‘limited’. But in one important respect it is. Despite the involvement of other countries in providing support to either Kyiv or Moscow, all of the fighting so far has been between Ukrainian defenders and Russian invaders. 

Further, aside from the occasional Ukrainian strike on Russian infrastructure, the military action is confined to Ukraine’s sovereign territory. Thus, since the start of the invasion a year ago, only one international border has been violated. 

However, that might be about to change. For weeks, tensions have been mounting between Russia and Moldova, which borders Ukraine. Earlier this month, the Moldovan President, Maia Sandu, accused Moscow of plotting a coup against her country’s pro-Western government. This week Vladimir Putin cancelled a foreign policy decree that recognises Moldovan independence.  

This morning, there are reports of a claim from the Russian Ministry of Defence that Ukraine is planning to move against Transnistria — a Russian-backed breakaway republic on Moldovan territory. This could provide the pretext for another Russian invasion. 

If the geography is confusing you, here’s a quick primer: Moldova is a small country of 2.6 million people sandwiched between Ukraine and Romania. It is not a member of NATO or the EU — and so if Putin has territorial ambitions beyond Ukraine, Moldova is acutely vulnerable.

Indeed, Russian troops are already there — and have been for decades. In 1991, a sliver of territory on Moldova’s eastern fringe broke away to establish the ‘Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic’ — better known as Transnistria. No member of the United Nations recognises Transnistrian sovereignty — not even Russia (officially). However, Russian ‘peacekeepers’ stationed on the territory have enabled its de facto independence from the rest of Moldova. 

Now, the war in Ukraine has unfrozen the Moldovan conflict. Had the invasion gone to plan, with the Russians conquering all of southern Ukraine from Mariupol to Odesa then that would have created a land bridge from Russia to the Moldovan border. There would have been nothing to stop Putin from incorporating Transnistria into his new empire — and perhaps the rest of Moldova, too.

However, the Russians were held back at Mykolaiv. They then retreated from Kherson. Transnistria is therefore more isolated than ever — and the Russian troops stationed there surrounded by hundreds of miles of hostile territory and airspace. 

But why would Putin be so obsessed about this sliver of land, which at some points is less than five miles wide? Yes, there are ethnic Russians living there, but according to the latest census they make up just 29.1% of the population (the remainder is largely divided between ethnic Moldovans and ethnic Ukrainians). 

Transnistria may be the key to controlling the rest of Moldova, but why bother? This is the poorest country in Europe, with no strategic resources. What’s more, from a Russian nationalist point of view, the Moldovan language (which is near identical to Romanian) is derived from Latin, not Slavic, roots. 

The only real motivating factor here is that Moldova used to be part of the old Soviet Union. As should be plainly obvious from Russia’s interventions in Ukraine and Georgia — and from Moscow’s growing encroachment on the independence of Belarus — Putin’s ambition is to recreate the USSR.

The post-Soviet history of Transnistria and the other Russian-backed breakaway states is a reminder of the real causes of conflict in Eastern Europe. The notion that NATO expansion provoked Russia is a cynical lie. The truth is the precise opposite: countries like Romania and the Baltic States joined NATO to escape Russian expansion. It’s why they don’t have Russian boot on their soil — unlike Ukraine and Moldova. 


Peter Franklin is Associate Editor of UnHerd. He was previously a policy advisor and speechwriter on environmental and social issues.

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Albireo Double
Albireo Double
1 year ago

So another false flag operation, with Putin invading Moldova, blaming Ukraine, and using it as an excuse for another attack on Ukraine.

He really does need to go. A new Russian leader may be just as revolting personally, but would at least have an excuse for pulling back out of Ukraine, plus the lesson not to try again well learned.

Putin can’t ever admit failure as his replacement could, so as long as we have Putin, we have this war going on.

Gen. Dannat is worth a read on this in yesterday’s Telegraph. Makes a lot more sense than armchair heroes like Blair and Welby, who both apparently felt the need to spout off about this subject, on which neither has a shred of knowledge

Last edited 1 year ago by Albireo Double
Elliott Bjorn
Elliott Bjorn
1 year ago
Reply to  Albireo Double

As long as we have Biden we have this war going on. This is Biden’s war, or really – what ever dark and evil force he serves.

This was a regional conflict involving two of the world’s most corrupt nations on Earth – Nothing to do with us except as we have been goading and messing about there – and it being the Clinton and Biden crime family’s piggy-bank for decades….

It was Biden (and his creature Boris) who decided to create a WWIII out of it.

Elliott Bjorn
Elliott Bjorn
1 year ago
Reply to  Albireo Double

As long as we have Biden we have this war going on. This is Biden’s war, or really – what ever dark and evil force he serves.

This was a regional conflict involving two of the world’s most corrupt nations on Earth – Nothing to do with us except as we have been goading and messing about there – and it being the Clinton and Biden crime family’s piggy-bank for decades….

It was Biden (and his creature Boris) who decided to create a WWIII out of it.

Albireo Double
Albireo Double
1 year ago

So another false flag operation, with Putin invading Moldova, blaming Ukraine, and using it as an excuse for another attack on Ukraine.

He really does need to go. A new Russian leader may be just as revolting personally, but would at least have an excuse for pulling back out of Ukraine, plus the lesson not to try again well learned.

Putin can’t ever admit failure as his replacement could, so as long as we have Putin, we have this war going on.

Gen. Dannat is worth a read on this in yesterday’s Telegraph. Makes a lot more sense than armchair heroes like Blair and Welby, who both apparently felt the need to spout off about this subject, on which neither has a shred of knowledge

Last edited 1 year ago by Albireo Double
Jonny Stud
Jonny Stud
1 year ago

Surely one of the root causes of all this was America convincing Ukraine to give up its nuclear weapons with a promise to defend them forever after…….and then not holding up their side of the bargain. Nobody invades a country with nukes

j watson
j watson
1 year ago
Reply to  Jonny Stud

Yep in hindsight a strategic mistake, although it was Yeltsin in the Kremlin then and not Putin.
All the more important now then that West supports Ukraine or the lesson elsewhere is that nuclear proliferation essential.

Elliott Bjorn
Elliott Bjorn
1 year ago
Reply to  Jonny Stud

I would find it as comforting knowing Ukraine had nukes as knowing Pakistan has them.

j watson
j watson
1 year ago
Reply to  Jonny Stud

Yep in hindsight a strategic mistake, although it was Yeltsin in the Kremlin then and not Putin.
All the more important now then that West supports Ukraine or the lesson elsewhere is that nuclear proliferation essential.

Elliott Bjorn
Elliott Bjorn
1 year ago
Reply to  Jonny Stud

I would find it as comforting knowing Ukraine had nukes as knowing Pakistan has them.

Jonny Stud
Jonny Stud
1 year ago

Surely one of the root causes of all this was America convincing Ukraine to give up its nuclear weapons with a promise to defend them forever after…….and then not holding up their side of the bargain. Nobody invades a country with nukes

Douglas McNeish
Douglas McNeish
1 year ago

Following the Putin Doctrine, Finland has been lost to Russian rule because of the imperialist encroachment of western Europe via the EU, and now NATO. Their true allegiance,.politically and culturally, rightly belongs to Moscow, but they need to be educated to understand this.

Douglas McNeish
Douglas McNeish
1 year ago

Following the Putin Doctrine, Finland has been lost to Russian rule because of the imperialist encroachment of western Europe via the EU, and now NATO. Their true allegiance,.politically and culturally, rightly belongs to Moscow, but they need to be educated to understand this.

Martin Logan
Martin Logan
1 year ago

“Frozen Conflicts” like Transnistria are Putin’s strategy, and have been all along.
Putin will never allow a former Soviet or Warsaw Pact nation to be permanently and completely free, if he can help it.
If they were, he thinks it’s the End of Russia.

Martin Logan
Martin Logan
1 year ago

“Frozen Conflicts” like Transnistria are Putin’s strategy, and have been all along.
Putin will never allow a former Soviet or Warsaw Pact nation to be permanently and completely free, if he can help it.
If they were, he thinks it’s the End of Russia.